Sturridge still sharp

Jurgen Klopp speaks to Daniel Sturridge as he prepares to come on during the Premier League match between Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool at Wembley Stadium on October 22, 2017 (Image: Getty Images Europe)

Yes, he has had his injury problems and his Liverpool career looked to be over in January when he went to West Brom on loan

And, okay, he had played only 21 minutes of football this season before starting against PSG, but what Daniel Sturridge proved again is that he is still the best finisher at the club.

Manager Jurgen Klopp says the striker is in the best shape since he took over three years ago and he showed that with a performance full of effort against the French champions.

More importantly, however, he put away his first chance when it came to him, making a difficult header look easy.

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Why Gary Neville was wrong

The former Manchester United defender suggested Liverpool did not have squad to be able to maintain challenges on two fronts and they should "kick into touch" the Champions League.

One look at Liverpool's bench against PSG would suggest otherwise. Fabinho, the £43.7m signing from Monaco, was sent on in the 89th minute for his first action of the season, while fellow summer arrival Naby Keita did not even make it on to the pitch

Another new arrival Xherdan Shaqiri has played just over half-an-hour across three games so far.

Former England full-back Nathaniel Clyne did not even make the squad, while Liverpool still have the injured Adam Lallana , Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain , Divock Origi , Dominic Solanke and England Under-19 striker Rhian Brewster to come back.

A winning mentality is everything

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp (Image: Julian Finney/Getty Images)

In the words of Liverpool fans' own 'Allez Allez Allez' Champions League anthem, they are "never gonna stop".

Having led 2-0 and then conceded an 83rd-minute equaliser to one of the best teams in Europe, many sides would have shut up shop to salvage a draw or, even worse, capitulated and conceded a winner.

Instead, Klopp's players picked themselves up and went on the offensive for the final seven minutes, a bold approach which ultimately - and deservedly - was rewarded with Roberto Firmino 's added-time goal.

Liverpool have previous for it at Anfield. In 2016, trailing 4-2 on aggregate to Borussia Dortmund in a Europa League quarter-final second leg they scored three goals in the final 24 minutes, with Dejan Lovren 's 91st-minute header ruining then Dortmund manager Thomas Tuchel's night - as it turned out, not for the last time.